Disability Awareness vs. Similarity Awareness
- (PDF; size=439k) Dedicated advocates across the country routinely
present disability awareness workshops to audiences of students,
community members, and others. Their efforts are an attempt to educate
others about people with disabilities, in order to decrease
discrimination and/or create a positive environment for an individual
with a disability in a typical setting of a classroom, job, and so
forth. But we can do better, as I'll detail after taking a closer look
at the flaws in traditional disability awareness techniques.
NICHCY Disability Awareness Resource List - NICHCY receives many
calls each year from people who are looking for materials on
disability awareness. People need these materials for many different
reasons, from classroom instructional units, to Girl Scout information
fairs, to school reports. This listing of Resources You Can Use
provides just a sample of selected materials available from different
organizations.
Official 'Awareness':
When Simulations Work - As part of the blind community, I have
been opposed to disability simulation exercises, believing they lead
more to fear than to enlightenment. However, other members of the
Fresno ADA Advisory Council, a cross-disability group working with
city government agencies, persuaded me to go along with their desire
to inaugurate the first Disability Awareness Day on October 15, 2003
with disability simulation activities for city officials. The results
were astounding.
Awareness Days:
Some Alternatives to Simulation Exercises - A staple of 'Awareness
Days' is the simulation exercise: Put a non-disabled person in a
wheelchair. Tie on a blindfold. But these tactics are often criticized
as sending the wrong message. What are the alternatives? Chapman
University's Art Blaser has a few suggestions.
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